It’s been a while since I posted, but I've been busy! Not that I’m complaining, but it sometimes
feels like there aren't enough hours in the day to do everything.
I’m working on an
SG-1 novella right now (Permafrost) that
I’m hoping to release in time for Christmas, and also – excitingly – I’ve made
contact with my editor at Choc Lit. She’ll
be editing my first historical romance novel (pirates!), which I believe will
be published either late this year or in early 2015. It doesn’t have a title yet – (how does ‘The
Winter Pirate’ sound? Good? Cheesy?) – but I’m expecting edits by the end
of the month. VERY EXCITED! I may be odd, but I genuinely love the
editing process. I can’t wait to get
started.
Meanwhile, I’ve just finished checking the galley proofs of
my SG-1 short story, Off Balance, which
is in our STARGATE: Far Horizons
anthology, out on 24th October.
So I thought it was about time I posted a little preview of Off Balance. It’s a short story, so this is a short
preview – it’s more of a teaser, really – just to get you wondering what the
heck’s going on...
STARGATE SG-1: Off Balance - Sally Malcolm
Coming out of the bend, he opened the throttle and smiled as the bike leapt forward, eating up the empty road. Adrenaline kicked, the needle nosed over ninety, and the thrill of all that raw power brought him alive for a precious few seconds.
Cliffs soared high on his right, sunset casting the rock in
shades of burnt orange, turning the landscape alien, otherworldly. And he should know.
He felt a spike of loss – still keen after nine years – and
accelerated harder, just to blast the feeling away. He liked speed, he’d always liked speed. His wife had once told him, with a note of
fond exasperation, that he was born to be a flyboy. The memory still made him smile, though it
was long ago now, part of his lost life.
Up ahead, he could see a line of mountains – the Collegiate
Peaks – and the glitter of Buena Vista’s lights scattered through the evening
shadows. He’d almost topped ninety-five,
and was just throttling back, when he heard the siren wail behind him.
Crap.
He slowed, glanced in the mirror and saw the flashing lights
of the patrol car pulling him over.
Obeying orders was in his blood and, besides, he knew the drill; this
wasn’t the first time he’d encountered Colorado’s finest. Pulling onto the shoulder, he killed the
engine and tugged off his helmet. He’d
never been good at feigning contrition, but he did his best as the officer
climbed out of his car. Recent
experience had taught him that cops didn’t like kids with smart mouths.
Tall, lanky, maybe early thirties, the police officer walked
with a youthful swagger – the kind of bravado born of a uniform, a rank, and a
gun at your side. “You know why I
stopped you, son?” the cop said.
“Yes sir.” He hated
being called ‘son’ by kids almost half his age.
“I’m gonna need to see your driver’s license.”
He handed it over and the officer studied it for a moment,
then peered at him over the tops of his sunglasses. “Jonathan O’Neill.”
“Yes sir.”
“You go by Jack?”
“Used to,” he said.
“Not anymore.”
The officer didn’t comment, eyes hidden again behind his
dark glasses. “Is this your bike, son?”
“Yes sir.”
“BMW R1200GS? That’s
a lotta machine for a kid your age.”
He gave a little shrug.
“I’m older than I look.”
“Says here you’re twenty-four. And that’s an expensive bike.”
“It was a gift,” he said, “from my uncle. Uncle Samuel.”
And, all things considered, that wasn’t exactly a lie. He
had to do something with the guilt money that dutifully rolled in each month
from the Air Force.
As usually happened, the police officer walked away a few
steps and spoke into his radio, probably calling through a check to make sure
the bike wasn’t stolen and that ‘Jonathan O’Neill’ wasn’t wanted for grand
theft auto across all fifty states.
Everything came back clean, of course, and in the end he only had to
endure a lecture on responsibility from a guy who had no idea what
responsibility meant.
It was dusk by the time he was allowed to go, so he turned
around and headed back toward Salida. He
was a little surprised that the police car followed him all the way into town,
only moving on after he’d pulled into the parking lot outside Bosco’s
Tavern. He guessed the cop didn’t have
much else to do, and resisted the urge to wave him goodbye. Low-profile was the watchword of his
so-called life these days, and sassing the police wouldn’t help keep him out of
trouble.
***
Since I also edited Far
Horizons, I can tell you that the stories are all fantastic. Despite the 10k word limit, we’ve got ten
complex, thoughtful stories that range
from funny, to heart-warming, to (Peter Evans, I’m looking at you!) chilling.
This is Fandemonium’s first anthology of short stories and I’m
really excited to see what our readers make of it, because I’d love to do
another collection next year. It’s been
so much fun reading and compiling the stories and I owe huge thanks to the
wonderful Stargate authors who’ve contributed.
And now I’d better get back to work on Permafrost. Only anther 7000
words to go!
Great preview for your story. I love your smooth writing style that takes you right into the story so well. I'm busy downloading a copy of Far Horizons onto my kindle as I write. Also excited about Permafrost - can you give a hint as to what it will be about please?
ReplyDeleteThank you! I hope you enjoy Far Horizons, it's got some great stories in all different styles.
DeleteSo, Permafrost. Well, let's see... Daniel recognizes a runic inscription at a recently discovered Norse burial site in Iceland as an Asgard warning not to disturb the grave. But when he and SG-1 go to investigate, just a few days before the mid-winter solstice, strange things start happening at the isolated dig site...
There, that's a world exclusive preview! lol I'll post a preview here once it's approved by MGM. :)
Thank you! I've been hoping for a Daniel and the Asgard storyline.
DeleteI shall buy this the moment it hits the e book section at Amazon.
I'm interested to hear how you go about writing a Stargate novel. Are you a 'pantser' or an outliner or half way between? Do you write to a schedule and do you need to edit a great deal - or is your writing style something that grew out of fanfiction dabbling? I would be grateful for your input.
Hi again, Just wondered how Permafrost was going and if there is a release date available yet. Wondering a little about your writing style as well. Do you outline heavily or are you a 'pantser' or half way between or do you write to a schedule or just a pre edited word count?
ReplyDeleteHi! Yes, Permafrost is ready to go and will be out before Christmas (still waiting final sign off on the cover).
ReplyDeleteHmmm...my writing style. I always used to be a 'pantser', and still am if I'm writing fic because there's no time limit, word count etc so I can just do what I like. But when I'm writing pro stuff, I do outline now. First I do a rough outline of the whole story, then I break it down chapter by chapter. I find it helps keep me on track in terms of word count and means less revising once the first draft is finished. That's not to say I don't still invent things as I go along - most of my best ideas come that way - so I am flexible with the outline when necessary and will sometimes rejig the outline halfway through to fit a new plot stream, or idea, that occurred to me while I was writing!
Thanks for commenting - I'll put an extract of Permafrost up shortly, and let you know the release date!
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteI suppose you've been frantically busy working up to Christmas as are we all. But a peek at Permafrost would be most welcome as well as a release date. I'm still hoping there hasn't been a delay on it because I'm wanting to gift it to some friends. Merry Christmas.